The Review Tour of FiiO FH5 Quad Driver Hybrid In-Ear Monitors Starts Now!
Jul 6, 2018 at 1:09 PM Post #32 of 80
Hi, I'm interested in trying out the FH5.
I use X5 III, A5 and K5.
I have F5, F9 and F9 Pro.
I live in Madrid (Spain) and speak Spanish and English.
I participate in this forum and other Spanish-speaking forums.
I hope to be able to contribute with my participation.
 
Jul 6, 2018 at 6:29 PM Post #33 of 80
Marvelous news! I am interested in writing a review for the FH5's and since I am interested in reviewing the audio equipment I use, it would be a great start to begin with the FH5's, before I go into detail with the rest of the equipment I have below:

-Headphone(s) / earphone(s) you possess:
- Headphones: Audio Technica m50x, AKG K812 Pro, KOSS Porta Pro
- Earphones: VE Monk Plus, Fiio EM3 (the white version, bundled with the Fiio M3)

-Any DAP(s) / DAC(s) / amp(s) you may possess:
- DAP: Fiio X3 Mark II, Fiio M3, Fiio X5 Mark III, Samsung Galaxy S9+
- DAC: Objective2, connected to my PC and my monitor speakers from PreSonus, the Eris 4.5

-Descriptions and links to review(s) you may have posted:
- Unfortunately, I have no reviews as I am quite new in the hi-fi portable world, but I plan to amend this as I get more free time due to my work, with reviewing the current audio hardware I own. I have written reviews for PC games for a Greek website for 3 years and can post links to these, if you are interested.

-Your geographical region (e.g. the city and country you live in):
- Currently based in Prague, Czech Republic. And will be for the foreseeable future.

-Your native language (and any other languages you may be able to write in):
- I speak Greek and Serbian natively, but all my reviews will be in English first and maybe one or both of my native languages, if time permits.

I plan on providing my reviews from a desktop and portable perspective, utilizing my O2 for the desktop part and the Fiio X5 Mark III along with the Galaxy S9+, for the portable aspect. From time to time, I might even update my reviews to include the Fiio X3 Mark II and Fiio M3, but that will strongly depend on me getting access to them, since I gave them away as presents to family and friends.

Thank you very much for the consideration!
 
Last edited:
Jul 7, 2018 at 1:42 PM Post #34 of 80
Headphones: Massdrop/Senn HD6xx, HiFiman HE400
Iems: LHL IEM-x, T-Peos Altone 250, 64Ears V6Stage. IMR R1 (arriving sometime in August).
DAPs: LHL Wave (arriving sometime next century)
DAC/Amps: LHL Pulse Infinity, LHL Geek Out
Sources: Sony Xperia phone

I haven't posted any reviews yet.

Location: Upstate NY

Language: English
 
Jul 7, 2018 at 7:08 PM Post #35 of 80
It would be great to try this along with the FiiO M7! (in which I applied too and already waiting for try it).

• Headphones: Audeze LCD-2C, Sennheiser IE800, Massdrop Plus
• DAP: Just my regular phone (Xiaomi Mi A1)
• AMP: Schiit Magni 3 feeded from the PC audio line and MBPr 13"
• Contributions: Comprehensive review in spanish of the Beyerdynamic DT1990 PRO and Shure SRH1540 in a Facebook's audio group (PM if needed).
• Geographical region: Chihuahua, Mexico, North America.
• Native language: Spanish
• Other language: English
 
Jul 9, 2018 at 9:37 PM Post #36 of 80
Edit: We saw the info at your other post! Thanks!

Can you provide info for :Geographical region and Native language?

I am interested in testing the FH5's. I previously tested the X7 Mark II.

Current headphones:
FIIO F9 PRO
Westone W-40
Kef M200
Kef M500
Grado sr325e

Music source - Fiio X7 II

Here is my review of fiio x7 mark II
If You Love Music, This Is The One
Written by hansonsc56
Published Oct 9, 2017
Pros - The sound. Separation, clarity, depth. New Control button layout. 2 MicroSD slots. and the Sound. Did I mention the sound?
Cons - Sorting of album titles beginning with the word "the".
Here’s my review of the FIIO X7 Mark II.

My background:

I’m a 62 year old who listens and plays music all of the time. I’ve played guitar for over 40 years, as well as years on bass and some drums. I play in a church group as the bass player and lead guitar (when called for). A few years ago I filled in for the drummer for a year. My wife plays piano and we have a Steinway grand in the house. I am an avid collector of guitars (acoustics, electrics and bass). I also bought a lot of ride cymbals looking for that perfect tone (for me, it’s the ride in Brubeck’s “Take Five”). For snares I wanted the Steely Dan “Black Cow” sound.

The point of this is that I am very familiar with how instruments sound when you play them. In terms of audio equipment, my goal has always been: “If they recorded it, I want to hear it”. So, I am always listening to hear TONE. Whether it is a Goodall Guitar (Doug Smith on “Alone at Last”, a Fender tweed (a lot of people), the sound of really good set of Hi-hats clicking, etc., I wanted to hear it like I was in the room.

As having a family limited my listening to my stereo (SONY ES series through KEF 104/2 Reference), I moved to headphones. When the Ipod came out I downloaded my CD collection to the computer and Ipod. I loved the portability and accepted the sound. I invested in some better IEM’s (some old Sony’s, Monster Cables Miles Davis Trumpets, and others). Then I read an article on CNET about Neil Young’s PONO player. Lossless tracks seemed the way to go. The article noted that while the PONO wasn’t available yet, this small Chinese company, FIIO had some great products at very reasonable prices.

I first bought the X5 version 1. Started converting my CD collection to FLAC files using Exact Audio Copy. It was like taking cotton out of my ears. I subsequently added a FIIO Montblanc amplifier and the sound was even better. My biggest frustration with the X5 was that the interface was not as easy to navigate as the Ipod’s. When the X7 with Android came out, I jumped on it (I am an Android guy not IOS).

When the new X7 Mark II came out, is signed up for the review tour. Which brings us to why you are hopefully still reading this. My review will be mostly about the sound. Other reviewers have done the unboxing thing, frequency graph’s, specs, etc., so if you want that info go read those reviews.
I am interested in testing the FH5's. I previously tested the X7 Mark II.

Current headphones:
FIIO F9 PRO
Westone W-40
Kef M200
Kef M500
Grado sr325e

Music source - Fiio X7 II

Here is my review of fiio x7 mark II
If You Love Music, This Is The One
Written by hansonsc56
Published Oct 9, 2017
Pros - The sound. Separation, clarity, depth. New Control button layout. 2 MicroSD slots. and the Sound. Did I mention the sound?
Cons - Sorting of album titles beginning with the word "the".
Here’s my review of the FIIO X7 Mark II.

My background:

I’m a 62 year old who listens and plays music all of the time. I’ve played guitar for over 40 years, as well as years on bass and some drums. I play in a church group as the bass player and lead guitar (when called for). A few years ago I filled in for the drummer for a year. My wife plays piano and we have a Steinway grand in the house. I am an avid collector of guitars (acoustics, electrics and bass). I also bought a lot of ride cymbals looking for that perfect tone (for me, it’s the ride in Brubeck’s “Take Five”). For snares I wanted the Steely Dan “Black Cow” sound.

The point of this is that I am very familiar with how instruments sound when you play them. In terms of audio equipment, my goal has always been: “If they recorded it, I want to hear it”. So, I am always listening to hear TONE. Whether it is a Goodall Guitar (Doug Smith on “Alone at Last”, a Fender tweed (a lot of people), the sound of really good set of Hi-hats clicking, etc., I wanted to hear it like I was in the room.

As having a family limited my listening to my stereo (SONY ES series through KEF 104/2 Reference), I moved to headphones. When the Ipod came out I downloaded my CD collection to the computer and Ipod. I loved the portability and accepted the sound. I invested in some better IEM’s (some old Sony’s, Monster Cables Miles Davis Trumpets, and others). Then I read an article on CNET about Neil Young’s PONO player. Lossless tracks seemed the way to go. The article noted that while the PONO wasn’t available yet, this small Chinese company, FIIO had some great products at very reasonable prices.

I first bought the X5 version 1. Started converting my CD collection to FLAC files using Exact Audio Copy. It was like taking cotton out of my ears. I subsequently added a FIIO Montblanc amplifier and the sound was even better. My biggest frustration with the X5 was that the interface was not as easy to navigate as the Ipod’s. When the X7 with Android came out, I jumped on it (I am an Android guy not IOS).

When the new X7 Mark II came out, is signed up for the review tour. Which brings us to why you are hopefully still reading this. My review will be mostly about the sound. Other reviewers have done the unboxing thing, frequency graph’s, specs, etc., so if you want that info go read those reviews.

My process.

I decided to do a blind comparison with my X7. I had a duplicate Micro SD card that I put in the MKII. For the test, I only used FLAC files that I had made from CD’s. The lineup included:

Steely Dan, Aja, “Peg”

Boz Scaggs, Silk Degrees, “Lido Shuffle”

Pink Floyd, Dark Side of the Moon, “Time”

Dave Brubeck, Time Out, “Take Five”

Bob Marley, Legend, “Jammin”

Paul Simon, Graceland, “Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes”

Jeff Hamilton Trio, Red Sparkle, “Red Sparkle”

We would cue up the song in both devices and my son would insert the headphones (Grado 325’s) into one of the DAP’s play a minute of the song and then switch to the other devices. I could not see which one he was playing. We matched the volume on both devices (the MKII AM3 probably had an advantage over the X7 AM1, but I was comparing the “stock” models). I would tell him which one I liked better.

The pieces I chose were selected because of their production, complexity, and that I really liked them. Right from the start it was clear that one device was better than the other. It was the Mark II. I don’t use (or in some cases understand) the language of some reviewers. I don’t understand what “effortless” means. So I will use my own standard/language. I do understand what soundstage separation refers to and I do see that as a required factor.

The differences were at times astounding, on “Peg” I was finally able to hear Michael McDonald’s multiple harmony parts, which in the past sounded like one voice. On many records, I could hear the ride cymbal’s wash like I had hit it myself. When playing an instrument, you hear the instrument “in it’s space”. There are overtones, harmonics, finger sound’s on strings, resonances, etc. the difference between a snare with a piece of gaffer’s tape stuck to it or not. A tube amp like a great fender tweed has an aura of tone. With the Mark II these were all there much clearer than on my beloved X7. The instruments were all amazingly clear. On some tracks, I was able to hear separate instrument parts that had always sounded like one part (listen to Springsteen’s “4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)”) On Peter Gabirel’s “In your Eyes”, the very subtle talking drum part in the left channel was extremely clear and realistic. Snarky Puppy’s “Lingus” sounded like I was in the room.

Drum sounds were like I was sitting on my throne. Bass sounds were “right there”.

So, I had a clear favorite in the race. I decided to enlist my son and wife (also musicians) to have them do a little blind testing. Both of them found the Mark II to be better than the Mark I. For my wife, I cued up Eine Kleine Nachtmusik (Mozart/Hogwood version). It clearly was better on the Mark II.

During my review period, Tom Petty passed away, so I listened to his music this week…a lot. His great music was blessed with great production which really came through on the Mark II.

I used a variety of headphones and IEM’s for my various listening. Most of the times I used my Grado 325’s. For the IEMS, I mostly used my KEF M200s, which I use when I really want to hear the bass player. Also used FIIO EX-1’s and Etymotic ER-4’s. Towards the end of the review, I started using my KEF M500’s. KEF is a gear British Speaker company, and I have loved my aforementioned 102/4’s. The M500’s emerged as my favorite way to listen to the Mark II’s.

Pet Peeve: I wish that the file sorting would be truly alphabetic. I finally figured out that albums are sorted by title and artist. In the section of albums beginning with “The”, this can be tricky. CD 1’s and 2’s are sometimes separate and hard to find. Not knowing the artist subsort, I spent a lot of time searching through the “The’s”.

I also really liked the new volume wheel. It was easier to use than the screen swipe option. The power button on top was also much better. The two Micro SD card drives are a big plus, particularly as my one 256GB card is almost full. The soft clear case is better than the hard one that came with the X7.

Without being too technical, the Mark II amplifier section is a big advancement over the X7. All I have to do now is convince Santa that I have been a very good boy and should get one of these under the tree on Christmas[/QUOTE

My process.

I decided to do a blind comparison with my X7. I had a duplicate Micro SD card that I put in the MKII. For the test, I only used FLAC files that I had made from CD’s. The lineup included:

Steely Dan, Aja, “Peg”

Boz Scaggs, Silk Degrees, “Lido Shuffle”

Pink Floyd, Dark Side of the Moon, “Time”

Dave Brubeck, Time Out, “Take Five”

Bob Marley, Legend, “Jammin”

Paul Simon, Graceland, “Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes”

Jeff Hamilton Trio, Red Sparkle, “Red Sparkle”

We would cue up the song in both devices and my son would insert the headphones (Grado 325’s) into one of the DAP’s play a minute of the song and then switch to the other devices. I could not see which one he was playing. We matched the volume on both devices (the MKII AM3 probably had an advantage over the X7 AM1, but I was comparing the “stock” models). I would tell him which one I liked better.

The pieces I chose were selected because of their production, complexity, and that I really liked them. Right from the start it was clear that one device was better than the other. It was the Mark II. I don’t use (or in some cases understand) the language of some reviewers. I don’t understand what “effortless” means. So I will use my own standard/language. I do understand what soundstage separation refers to and I do see that as a required factor.

The differences were at times astounding, on “Peg” I was finally able to hear Michael McDonald’s multiple harmony parts, which in the past sounded like one voice. On many records, I could hear the ride cymbal’s wash like I had hit it myself. When playing an instrument, you hear the instrument “in it’s space”. There are overtones, harmonics, finger sound’s on strings, resonances, etc. the difference between a snare with a piece of gaffer’s tape stuck to it or not. A tube amp like a great fender tweed has an aura of tone. With the Mark II these were all there much clearer than on my beloved X7. The instruments were all amazingly clear. On some tracks, I was able to hear separate instrument parts that had always sounded like one part (listen to Springsteen’s “4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)”) On Peter Gabirel’s “In your Eyes”, the very subtle talking drum part in the left channel was extremely clear and realistic. Snarky Puppy’s “Lingus” sounded like I was in the room.

Drum sounds were like I was sitting on my throne. Bass sounds were “right there”.

So, I had a clear favorite in the race. I decided to enlist my son and wife (also musicians) to have them do a little blind testing. Both of them found the Mark II to be better than the Mark I. For my wife, I cued up Eine Kleine Nachtmusik (Mozart/Hogwood version). It clearly was better on the Mark II.

During my review period, Tom Petty passed away, so I listened to his music this week…a lot. His great music was blessed with great production which really came through on the Mark II.

I used a variety of headphones and IEM’s for my various listening. Most of the times I used my Grado 325’s. For the IEMS, I mostly used my KEF M200s, which I use when I really want to hear the bass player. Also used FIIO EX-1’s and Etymotic ER-4’s. Towards the end of the review, I started using my KEF M500’s. KEF is a gear British Speaker company, and I have loved my aforementioned 102/4’s. The M500’s emerged as my favorite way to listen to the Mark II’s.

Pet Peeve: I wish that the file sorting would be truly alphabetic. I finally figured out that albums are sorted by title and artist. In the section of albums beginning with “The”, this can be tricky. CD 1’s and 2’s are sometimes separate and hard to find. Not knowing the artist subsort, I spent a lot of time searching through the “The’s”.

I also really liked the new volume wheel. It was easier to use than the screen swipe option. The power button on top was also much better. The two Micro SD card drives are a big plus, particularly as my one 256GB card is almost full. The soft clear case is better than the hard one that came with the X7.

Without being too technical, the Mark II amplifier section is a big advancement over the X7. All I have to do now is convince Santa that I have been a very good boy and should get one of these under the tree on Christmas

I am interested in testing the FH5's. I previously tested the X7 Mark II.

Current headphones:
FIIO F9 PRO
Westone W-40
Kef M200
Kef M500
Grado sr325e

Music source - Fiio X7 II

Here is my review of fiio x7 mark II
If You Love Music, This Is The One
Written by hansonsc56
Published Oct 9, 2017
Pros - The sound. Separation, clarity, depth. New Control button layout. 2 MicroSD slots. and the Sound. Did I mention the sound?
Cons - Sorting of album titles beginning with the word "the".
Here’s my review of the FIIO X7 Mark II.

My background:

I’m a 62 year old who listens and plays music all of the time. I’ve played guitar for over 40 years, as well as years on bass and some drums. I play in a church group as the bass player and lead guitar (when called for). A few years ago I filled in for the drummer for a year. My wife plays piano and we have a Steinway grand in the house. I am an avid collector of guitars (acoustics, electrics and bass). I also bought a lot of ride cymbals looking for that perfect tone (for me, it’s the ride in Brubeck’s “Take Five”). For snares I wanted the Steely Dan “Black Cow” sound.

The point of this is that I am very familiar with how instruments sound when you play them. In terms of audio equipment, my goal has always been: “If they recorded it, I want to hear it”. So, I am always listening to hear TONE. Whether it is a Goodall Guitar (Doug Smith on “Alone at Last”, a Fender tweed (a lot of people), the sound of really good set of Hi-hats clicking, etc., I wanted to hear it like I was in the room.

As having a family limited my listening to my stereo (SONY ES series through KEF 104/2 Reference), I moved to headphones. When the Ipod came out I downloaded my CD collection to the computer and Ipod. I loved the portability and accepted the sound. I invested in some better IEM’s (some old Sony’s, Monster Cables Miles Davis Trumpets, and others). Then I read an article on CNET about Neil Young’s PONO player. Lossless tracks seemed the way to go. The article noted that while the PONO wasn’t available yet, this small Chinese company, FIIO had some great products at very reasonable prices.

I first bought the X5 version 1. Started converting my CD collection to FLAC files using Exact Audio Copy. It was like taking cotton out of my ears. I subsequently added a FIIO Montblanc amplifier and the sound was even better. My biggest frustration with the X5 was that the interface was not as easy to navigate as the Ipod’s. When the X7 with Android came out, I jumped on it (I am an Android guy not IOS).

When the new X7 Mark II came out, is signed up for the review tour. Which brings us to why you are hopefully still reading this. My review will be mostly about the sound. Other reviewers have done the unboxing thing, frequency graph’s, specs, etc., so if you want that info go read those reviews.

My process.

I decided to do a blind comparison with my X7. I had a duplicate Micro SD card that I put in the MKII. For the test, I only used FLAC files that I had made from CD’s. The lineup included:

Steely Dan, Aja, “Peg”

Boz Scaggs, Silk Degrees, “Lido Shuffle”

Pink Floyd, Dark Side of the Moon, “Time”

Dave Brubeck, Time Out, “Take Five”

Bob Marley, Legend, “Jammin”

Paul Simon, Graceland, “Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes”

Jeff Hamilton Trio, Red Sparkle, “Red Sparkle”

We would cue up the song in both devices and my son would insert the headphones (Grado 325’s) into one of the DAP’s play a minute of the song and then switch to the other devices. I could not see which one he was playing. We matched the volume on both devices (the MKII AM3 probably had an advantage over the X7 AM1, but I was comparing the “stock” models). I would tell him which one I liked better.

The pieces I chose were selected because of their production, complexity, and that I really liked them. Right from the start it was clear that one device was better than the other. It was the Mark II. I don’t use (or in some cases understand) the language of some reviewers. I don’t understand what “effortless” means. So I will use my own standard/language. I do understand what soundstage separation refers to and I do see that as a required factor.

The differences were at times astounding, on “Peg” I was finally able to hear Michael McDonald’s multiple harmony parts, which in the past sounded like one voice. On many records, I could hear the ride cymbal’s wash like I had hit it myself. When playing an instrument, you hear the instrument “in it’s space”. There are overtones, harmonics, finger sound’s on strings, resonances, etc. the difference between a snare with a piece of gaffer’s tape stuck to it or not. A tube amp like a great fender tweed has an aura of tone. With the Mark II these were all there much clearer than on my beloved X7. The instruments were all amazingly clear. On some tracks, I was able to hear separate instrument parts that had always sounded like one part (listen to Springsteen’s “4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)”) On Peter Gabirel’s “In your Eyes”, the very subtle talking drum part in the left channel was extremely clear and realistic. Snarky Puppy’s “Lingus” sounded like I was in the room.

Drum sounds were like I was sitting on my throne. Bass sounds were “right there”.

So, I had a clear favorite in the race. I decided to enlist my son and wife (also musicians) to have them do a little blind testing. Both of them found the Mark II to be better than the Mark I. For my wife, I cued up Eine Kleine Nachtmusik (Mozart/Hogwood version). It clearly was better on the Mark II.

During my review period, Tom Petty passed away, so I listened to his music this week…a lot. His great music was blessed with great production which really came through on the Mark II.

I used a variety of headphones and IEM’s for my various listening. Most of the times I used my Grado 325’s. For the IEMS, I mostly used my KEF M200s, which I use when I really want to hear the bass player. Also used FIIO EX-1’s and Etymotic ER-4’s. Towards the end of the review, I started using my KEF M500’s. KEF is a gear British Speaker company, and I have loved my aforementioned 102/4’s. The M500’s emerged as my favorite way to listen to the Mark II’s.

Pet Peeve: I wish that the file sorting would be truly alphabetic. I finally figured out that albums are sorted by title and artist. In the section of albums beginning with “The”, this can be tricky. CD 1’s and 2’s are sometimes separate and hard to find. Not knowing the artist subsort, I spent a lot of time searching through the “The’s”.

I also really liked the new volume wheel. It was easier to use than the screen swipe option. The power button on top was also much better. The two Micro SD card drives are a big plus, particularly as my one 256GB card is almost full. The soft clear case is better than the hard one that came with the X7.

Without being too technical, the Mark II amplifier section is a big advancement over the X7. All I have to do now is convince Santa that I have been a very good boy and should get one of these under the tree on Christmas
 
Last edited:
FiiO Stay updated on FiiO at their sponsor profile on Head-Fi.
 
https://www.facebook.com/FiiOAUDIO https://twitter.com/FiiO_official https://www.instagram.com/fiioofficial/ https://www.fiio.com support@fiio.com
Jul 10, 2018 at 6:03 AM Post #37 of 80
Announcement on the first list of previewers for FiiO FH5 review tour:

@soundstige
@hansonsc56
@iburdeinick
@Wiljen
@darmanastartes
@tomcdman
@agentbarton
@Judge17

@The_headphone_guy
@Palash
@dheepak10
@manukmanohar
@Vincent Do
@R21800

@tenedosian
@slumber86
@Zombiecow
@RedFenderJag
@Titoyago
@denis1976


The list was chosen based on the qualification as well as your location. If there will be more applications in your place in the near future, we will have you in.

Please kindly send PM to FiiO with your mailing info including the following:
1. Contact person
2. Detailed address and postal code
3. Telephone number

Congratulations and happy touring!:L3000::L3000::L3000:

P.S. The application is still open till further notice, welcome to join the queue!:bouquet::bouquet::bouquet:
 
Last edited:
FiiO Stay updated on FiiO at their sponsor profile on Head-Fi.
 
https://www.facebook.com/FiiOAUDIO https://twitter.com/FiiO_official https://www.instagram.com/fiioofficial/ https://www.fiio.com support@fiio.com
Jul 10, 2018 at 6:08 AM Post #38 of 80
Announcement on the first list of previewers for FiiO FH5 review tour:

@soundstige
@hansonsc56
@iburdeinick
@Wiljen
@darmanastartes
@tomcdman
@agentbarton
@Judge17

@The_headphone_guy
@Palash
@dheepak10
@manukmanohar
@Vincent Do
@R21800

@tenedosian
@slumber86
@Zombiecow
@RedFenderJag
@Titoyago
@denis1976


The list was chosen based on the qualification as well as your location. If there will be more applications in your place in the near future, we will have you in.

Please kindly send PM to FiiO with your mailing info including the following:
1. Contact person
2. Detailed address and postal code
3. Telephone number

Congratulations and happy touring!:L3000::L3000::L3000:

P.S. The application is still open till further notice, welcome to join the queue!:bouquet::bouquet::bouquet:
Wow, Great.
 
Last edited:
Jul 10, 2018 at 8:41 PM Post #40 of 80
Announcement on the first list of previewers for FiiO FH5 review tour:

@soundstige
@hansonsc56
@iburdeinick
@Wiljen
@darmanastartes
@tomcdman
@agentbarton
@Judge17

@The_headphone_guy
@Palash
@dheepak10
@manukmanohar
@Vincent Do
@R21800

@tenedosian
@slumber86
@Zombiecow
@RedFenderJag
@Titoyago
@denis1976


The list was chosen based on the qualification as well as your location. If there will be more applications in your place in the near future, we will have you in.

Please kindly send PM to FiiO with your mailing info including the following:
1. Contact person
2. Detailed address and postal code
3. Telephone number

Congratulations and happy touring!:L3000::L3000::L3000:

P.S. The application is still open till further notice, welcome to join the queue!:bouquet::bouquet::bouquet:


Wow, thank you so much for considering me!
 
Jul 11, 2018 at 2:14 AM Post #41 of 80
Last edited:
FiiO Stay updated on FiiO at their sponsor profile on Head-Fi.
 
https://www.facebook.com/FiiOAUDIO https://twitter.com/FiiO_official https://www.instagram.com/fiioofficial/ https://www.fiio.com support@fiio.com
Jul 11, 2018 at 9:47 PM Post #43 of 80
According to the geographical distribution of the qualified reviewers, we have arranged 4pcs of FH5 out to make the review tour start! The first 4 reviewers to kick the tour off are @soundstige, @iburdeinick, @The_headphone_guy and @denis1976, we will inform you the tracking number via PM. For other reviewers, we will notify you in advance when the unit is about to ship to you!
 
FiiO Stay updated on FiiO at their sponsor profile on Head-Fi.
 
https://www.facebook.com/FiiOAUDIO https://twitter.com/FiiO_official https://www.instagram.com/fiioofficial/ https://www.fiio.com support@fiio.com
Jul 12, 2018 at 5:49 PM Post #44 of 80
Please apply by replying to this thread and including the following information in your reply:
•-Headphone(s) / earphone(s) you possess:
•-Any DAP(s) / DAC(s) / amp(s) you may possess:
•-Descriptions and links to review(s) you may have posted:
•-Your geographical region (e.g. the city and country you live in):
•-Your native language (and any other languages you may be able to write in):

  • I currently own a pair of Bose Soundsport Wireless and B&O Play H6
  • I do not own and DAP(s), DAC(s), or amp(s) at this time.
  • This will be my first review
  • Cali, Colombia (South America)
  • English, possible to write in Spanish.
 
Last edited:
Jul 20, 2018 at 8:24 PM Post #45 of 80
Please apply by replying to this thread and including the following information in your reply:
•-Headphone(s) / earphone(s) you possess:
Shure SE215, SE215 SE, Tin Audio T2, Beyerdynamic Byron, Fiio F9 - was stolen :frowning2:

•-Any DAP(s) / DAC(s) / amp(s) you may possess:
Aune M1s

•-Descriptions and links to review(s) you may have posted:
My First Full length review. Writing one for the Tin Audio T2 too.

•-Your geographical region (e.g. the city and country you live in):
Bangalore, India.

•-Your native language (and any other languages you may be able to write in):
English, Kannada(decent)

Thank you for considering me. Hopefully looking forward to this...
I listen to a lot of metal and busy/congested music and am looking forward to seeing how this sounds.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top